Freeranger Eggs is a free range egg farm at Grantville in the southern Australian state of Victoria. Our hens are never locked up, they are fed a natural diet of grains with no additives - and they are not beak-trimmed.
The only reason for removing the top part or even the tip of the beak is that when hens are confined in small spaces and in large numbers they often become aggressive and attack each other. On a true free range farm with plenty of space, all birds have full beaks.

Problems with Salmonella are not common in Australia as most commercial farms follow strict food safety procedures.

We are always amazed at the things we see people getting away with at markets - even Farmers' Markets which claim to only have accredited stallholders .

Here's a brief run-down about Salmonella and how good operators can easily avoid the problem.

Salmonella is a bacteria that
can be found on many farms. Chickens carry the bacteria in their bodies, and pass Salmonella into the yolk and white while eggs
are being formed in the ovaries. Bacteria may be deposited on
the eggshell when the egg is laid and then in the right conditions, the bacteria can pass through the shell pores into the egg itself.

Despite a common belief,
cracked eggs are not generally responsible for Salmonella problems.
An intact shell does not guarantee safe eggs. The key is good
on-farm hygiene practices with rodent control, clean nest boxes,
clean grading and packing facilities and adequate cool storage. Eggs should be clean when they are laid and regular collection and good handling practices prevent the spread of bacteria.

Any part of the egg can
harbour bacteria, and both whites and yolks have been implicated in
food borne illness. However, the yolk is the most common source.

Chickens can be infected with
salmonella bacteria from their environment, which is easily
contaminated by rodents, birds and flies. These carriers take the
bacteria to all types of egg farms whether they're
cage, organic or free-range. The totally controlled environment of cage systems probably makes the problem less likely there as long as feed, water storage and egg handling facilities are up to scratch.

Once the bacteria get inside the
chickens, the micro organisms thrive under ideal temperature and
conditions.

When the eggs have been laid,
multiplication happens fast if the eggs aren't cooled quickly. And if
there's a lapse in cleaning practices or an undetected outbreak among
the chickens, the percentage of affected eggs can increase rapidly.

Salmonella bacteria can
double every 20 minutes under ideal conditions. In an hour at room
temperature, two bacteria could become 32. At two hours, there may be
1,000 organisms. At eight hours, there can be millions in one egg.

One of the big problems for consumers at markets is that eggs are often transported halfway across the State and are not kept in temperature controlled conditions. The eggs may leave the farm on Thursday or Friday for deliveries in Melbourne and some may not be sold until a Sunday market.

If those eggs are well
cooked, they should present no problem – but if they are eaten raw
or in an undercooked form, gastroenteritis is often the result.

According to press reports, the problems with the latest contamination issue has been a combination of poor egg handling procedures and the number of eggs laid on the floor of the sheds rather than in nest boxes. The company's answer appears to be to import an egg washing machine to wash all eggs produced on the farm.

This outbreak demonstrates why industry accreditation programs are a fiasco.

Here's the latest from Green Eggs as published:

Products from a Great Western egg farm, Green Eggs,
are back in the market place following a link with a salmonella outbreak.

The Victorian Health Department linked an outbreak of
gastro enteritis due to salmonella at two restaurants to raw-egg foods made from Green Eggs products.

The Department of Environment and Primary Industries
restricted the sale of eggs from the Great Western farm until additional cleaning and hygiene measures were in place to improve food safety. Those measures are now in place.

Owner Alan Green said the small business was
devastated by the link to their product.

Mr Green said five employees had lost jobs this week
because of changes made to the processing and packaging department.

He said Green Eggs were awaiting the delivery of an
online washer from overseas to assist quality control.

"Eggs are now going out - they are being washed in
Melbourne and are back in the market place," he said.

"Eggs already in the market place are fine but the
public's safety is our number one priority."

Chief health officer Dr Rosemary Lester said people
who had bought Green Eggs products from their supermarket and still had eggs in their fridge should only use them for cooked dishes and foods.

Dr Lester said thoroughly cooking eggs
rendered them safe from contaminants such as salmonella.

Green Eggs supplies a range of restaurants, cafes and
other eateries, farmers' markets and several supermarkets across Victoria, including A Bottle of Milk restaurant in Torquay, where 220 people ate before coming down with gastroenteritis in February.

About Me

With a background in journalism and public relations in the UK, Africa and Australia, I've been farming for over 30 years. I'm an Environmental Auditor and have been an egg industry auditor as well as a former President of the Free Range Egg and Poultry Association of Australia and the Free Range Farmers Association of Victoria.
Our farm has been designed for sustainable land management and we have a long involvement with Landcare. I have carried out regional flora and fauna surveys and have also run courses and lectured on community development, land management and run workshops on sustainability and setting up free range egg farms. .
The Freeranger Farm runs sheep, cattle and horses as well as laying hens - a genuine mixed farm. Everything on the farm is designed for minimal impact. As much as possible recycled materials are used, solar power helps to achieve our sustainability aims and the farm is not just carbon neutral - it is carbon positive.
Even our main shed, which includes the farm office, egg grading room, storage and maintenance facilities, was constructed mainly using recycled steel sections purchased at a farm clearing sale.